Corrections Corp. of America leaving Idaho

Oct. 3, 2013

Written by

Rebecca Boone

Associated Press

DID COMPANY SAVE STATE MONEY?

It’s not clear, however, whether Idaho’s $29 million contract with CCA represented an actual cost savings. An investigation by The Associated Press in 2012 showed it would likely cost the Idaho Department of Corrections the same amount of money or less to have state employees run the facility.

Idaho Department of Correction Director Brent Reinke has asked the state Board of Correction at least twice if his department should examine whether it would be cheaper for the state to run the prison, but both times he was rebuffed.

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BOISE, IDAHO — Private prison giant Corrections Corp. of America will leave Idaho after more than a decade marked by scandal and lawsuits surrounding its operation of the state’s largest prison.

The Nashville-based company will not bid on the next contract to run the Idaho Correctional Center south of Boise, CCA Vice President Brad Regens said in a letter Thursday to the Department of Corrections.

The decision came as Idaho State Police, aided by a forensic auditing firm, is investigating allegations of possible contract fraud and falsified staffing reports involving CCA.

A federal judge also has held CCA in contempt of court for failing to abide by the terms of a settlement agreement reached with inmates in a lawsuit claiming high rates of violence and chronic understaffing at the prison.

CCA spokesman Steven Owen said the company is taking appropriate steps to remedy staffing problems at the prison and is committed to reimbursing taxpayers for any unverified hours.

CCA’s contract with Idaho ends on June 30, 2014.

The Idaho Board of Correction had the option to extend CCA’s contract for two more years but decided in June against it. Instead, the state will issue a formal request for proposals later this year.

CCA has acknowledged that its employees filed staffing reports with the state that incorrectly showed it had the contractually required number of guards on duty during several months in 2012.

Owen, the company’s spokesman, said the unverified hours were only a fraction of total staffing requirements at the prison. The company has maintained that the understaffing did not result in an increase of violence or any security problems at the prison.

Monica Hopkins, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Idaho, said she was glad to hear CCA was leaving the state.

“Unfortunately the state hasn’t realized that it’s time to take back ownership and operation of their own facility, so there’s no guarantee that this won’t happen with another private contractor,” she said. “It’s time for the state to exercise the proper role of government and operate its own facilities.”

Boise attorney T.J. Angstman, who is representing inmates in a lawsuit alleging CCA ceded control to prison gangs so it could operate the facility with a skeleton crew of guards, said the departure won’t automatically fix the problems at the prison. CCA has denied the allegations in that lawsuit.